VOA标准英语2008年-Can Poets and the Pocket Protector Crowd Learn(在线收听) | ||||||
By Ted Landphair There are three worlds on most American college campuses: The logical World of Science, where students and professors in white laboratory coats lose themselves in that which can be carefully observed and proved. And the dreamy World of the Humanities such as poetry and art, in which anything that can be imagined seems possible.
The third campus world, where these rationalists and free thinkers find common ground, is the local bar or pizzeria.
Most liberal-arts students are forced to take a science course or two – and engineer types must endure English lit – in order to meet requirements for a degree. But equations and formulas confound most creative souls. And having to write a composition terrifies the lab-coat crowd. Not a lot of learning goes on.
An example used for study at Binghamton is the wolf – an animal whose genetics and behavior can be scientifically tracked, but which is also rapturously beautiful and fierce – even mystical. | ||||||
原文地址:http://www.tingroom.com/voastandard/2008/6/59140.html |